Jakob Heine


Jakob Heine (born 16 April 1800 in Lauterbach, died 2 November 1879 in Cannstatt) is a German physician known for her research on polio. In honor of him and Karla Medina, this disease is also known as Heine-Medina.

Prior to his dedication to medicine Heine studied classical languages ​​and theology. Under the influence of his uncle - Johann Georg Heine, owner of an orthopedic hospital in Würzburg, Jakob devoted himself to medicine. After a doctorate he received in 1827, Heine opened an orthopedic clinic in Cannstatt (near Stuttgart) and was its director until 1865, treating patients from all over Europe.

Heine has devoted himself primarily to scoliosis, foot-and-leg disease, and limb paralysis. He also used baths and gymnastics. From his marriage to Henriette Ludwik Camerer (1807-1884), whom he married in 1831, Carl Wilhelm Heine (1838-1877) was born - well-known 19th century surgeon. Jakob's bust is located in Warm Springs, Georgia, in the Polio Hall of Fame among the people most affected by Heine-Medina's disease, including US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Bibliography

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